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g with his comrades from the flagship. While these forces were taking up their positions the whole of the native popu- lation of Apia—men, women and child- ren—were streaming by ord to Mu- linuu for safety and protection behind the gallant bluejackets under Lieuten- ant Brown. General operations were, ot course, under the command of Ad- miral Kautz As soon as the land forces were sta- tioned the Philadelphia opened fire by | throwing a €hell into the outskirts of Apia. The R followed with some | 6-inch s e Porpoise went outside the h eding a couple of ombarded the vil- | e large numbers of to be. Some boats d but all natives fled he den: b the back. Th as . both of She is the ing force which powder, and her guns report than those of the f gene an and Briti ch at Vaimoso wa: another tore away e German plantation at Vaitele. The _of the outskirts of Apia were helled from the harbor, about seventy being f a4 for a time. Every village around was from the gt fired at the | villa f the Ameri- can con ¢ it exploded | when yards and the con- da of the the American cou- va the | smashed by | a portion nda and house of the manager | ed before dusk, when firing | ANTLA, April 7, 4:50.p. m.—Gen- eral MacArthur’s operations con- sist, temporarily, in daily recon- naissances in various directions, for the purpose of keeping in touch with the rebels and ascertaining their movements. The Fourth Cavalry and two guns were out all the morning in the direction of Bairasoain, a little north of Malolos. In the meantime the dredgers are busy clearing the channel of the Rio C nde to Pampagua. The United States double-turreted monitor Monadnock is patrolling the bay in the vicinity of Bakoor, keeping the rebels in motion and dropping oc- casional shells among them in response to their musketry fire. Saul, reported to have been bom- barded by the Baltimore, is merely a suburb of Dagupan, which, as cabled exclusively to the Associated Press on Thursday morning last, was bombarded by the United States cruiser Charleston saturday because one of her boats fired upon and an offiter wounded while inshore making soundings. NEW YORK, April 7.—A Washing- ton special to the Herald says: General MacArthur's division, which has been L e T L aaCa ] B e U S CE SR SCRs SRS THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL, SATURDAY, APRIL 8, 1899. Mdac ARTHUR KEEPS TAGALLOS MOVING AHILLERL 10 CALIFORNIA THE FRONT Does Gallant Work at the Capture of San Roque From the Enemy. TRICK OF TAGALLOS Disnlayed a Flag of Truce and Then Fired the Place as the Americans Advanced. Correspondence of The Call, MANILA, March 4—A Cavite special sthe WAR OF RACES ON A PLANTATION NEAR HONOLULU Japanese Attack Chinese, Killing ‘Three and Wounding Many. ONOLULU, March 27.—The Marshal and the Honolulu police were called t6 Kahuku yesterday by the most serious¥acial outbreak that has ever occurred on the islands. Two_hundred and fifty Japanese laborers of the Kahuku plantation, crudely but heavily armed, made a sudden foray upon the unsuspecting Chinese laborers of the planta- tion, who with their wives and children were spending the leisure of the day in their own quarters. The attack was premeditated, organized and sudden. The Japanese had sent their women and children to the mill and other places of safety. Moving out of their own quarters suddenly and in a body, they. caught the.Chinese at a disadvantage, Killing three of them, fatally injuring two or three more, wounding a large number and driving the re- mainder in a panic to the canefields The trouble between the Chin and Japanese at Kahuku has been brewing for some time, but did not reach a serious is until yesterday. It was about 2 o’clock in the afternoon when this large party of Japanese visited the Chinese quarters and began the assault. The Japanese Wwere to Freedom, dated February 24, giv S resting at Malolos, will resume its Sulal | northward movement without further 0 the | Gelay. Information received from Ma- first story of.the capture of San Roque, armed with what are known as spiked.clubs, kniv axes and \-arjnus olk}er |in which California artillery played a weapons. It is said not one of the Chinamen had anything to fight with bt vs: and the entire party was helpless. nila indicates that reconnoitering® par- part, as follows: ¥ 5% ; ties have discovered a large body of in- The burning of San Roque and the In the fight which ensued three Chinamen were beaten to death and surgents under the command, it is be- | complete routing of the insurgent Gen- | twelve were badly wounded. Some forty or fifty were slightly wounded. ved, of Aguinaldo, in the vicinity of | eral Astrillia and his army of about 300 | As soon as the alarm had spread to the plantation Manager Weight Calumpit, and it is intended td scatter or crush them if they will remain and fight. he autherities would like nothing better than to have the Filipinos make a stand against MacAwsthur, as they be- lieve a crushing defeat will do more just at this time to end the rebellion than "a¥ything else. General Otis make demonstrations against southern bands of insurgents while General MacArthur continues his northward movement. The Journal's correspondent at Ma- nila cables to-day that pacificos who have returned within the American ines report the death ¢f General Mon- & . Wwho was regarded as; next to raldo, the m influential and ag- e of the Filipino leaders. The is credited at Manila, where it believed the general fell while de- 3 and a number of the lunas rushed to the quarters. After considerable dif- fantry and California and Nevada Ar- ficulty they succeeded in staying the fight and then drove the Japanese tillery for the quick and effective man- 4 r Was repor . ner in which the work was accomplished, | DPack to their own camp. At the same time the affair was rey :ned to the General Astrillla had been warned that| Marshal. Shortly after 9 o’clock Minister Cooper, Marshal Brown, Prose- he must raise a white flag over his head- | * cuting Attorney A. L. C. Atkinson, ten mounted police and a squad of foot quarters and lay down his arms by 9/ lic - = 27 | o'clock on the morning of the Sth or| PO ice started for the scene on a special train. . , : | our ror:e> would bnmlfi”dh‘md take (rl\gl The first work of the Marshal at Kahuku was to institute a martial | city. No one expected that he wou : SYS G vi e d there to pre- oy Bhd s A ttoma stinrie]| - oy mYBLCI onL s EaaHsenle. s HuARdE IR placef 1 ;e a'}". ' fp that shortly before the appointed time vent the belligerents getting together again. With the thirty men frc one of the largest white flags yet brought | town there were several from Waialua, as well as the police from Koolau, into service was h;‘!;‘g;‘leluvl-'x‘ 'J}“JFS[”J; making in all about fifty-five officers. The night was spent locating the Who G5 I command here, | Chinese, many of whom had fled, and getting the men known to have been ors, put but little confidence | in the fight into places where they could be guarded. Both camps, it is un- | in the faith of the insurgents, however. | gergiood, were surrounded as soon as the Marshal's party reached the scene. AndInEtag OaandnE ol e Just before daylight a Coroner’s jury was impaneled to investigate the | the forces were at once made ready for | Killing of the three Chinese. Numerous witnesses, nearly all Chinese, were an attack. @ that no faith was placed in| examined. The jury returned a verdict to the effect that the men were the flag of truce, for as soon as the| murdered. | treacherous insurgen saw that our | From the evidence adduced at the Coroner's hearing and other indica- 4 | forces were not going to fall into thelr | 4 1o onthered during the progress of the investigation, twenty-three Jap- trap they poured out of the hidden rifle- € D it where they had been stationed and an were arrested and were brought to the city on a special train this d to be the ringleade: before stated the fending Malolos =) THE FILIPINO GENERAL MONTENEGRO. ¢ Bleai " ainld tieltorth'so e bulli: | aricrmoon. They were belies Aebetor AUBIHONAL CASUM TIES : & | D 19 Shelr Tench. hopisg I, thie wndy twelve Chinese who were.so badly injured are 1 O & | 12 ance o Americ elve c e.so badly REPORTED BY OTIS B i oeisisieitisisieieieieisirieieie® forces long gh v them to of them ¥ not survive a by R B S e R e O L L O R R O e Y @ D B C SO +- - o e >0 . e forces long enough to allow them to re-| ing to the hospital for treatment. Two or mor: reat, which plan worked successfully, as | their wounds. Killed: April 4, First Montana, Com-|it was some time ore it wa fe to| = : 5 - pany srporal O. Rowlands. | start in pursuit, and even then the Sec- | There were at the camps, most of whom were mixed up in the fight, March 27: Company K— England, fin, WASHINGTON, April 0 day’s date ot ¥ lmfil;\n.z!o:ugfin‘x ¥ covounded: Band Sergeant George W.|ond and Third battalions of the Wyoming | Chinamen and Japanese. Both of the Chinese camps were surrounded ¥5! Génkral b ington, March 2 vell. ankle, siight; Company G— oys, with their beautiful three-inc e = e tow. and A v o 2 E oty Ditle William B. Pynch ats Willlam 3. Bort, knee, tsevare:i M->| faces, GomlAgat: no furfHer ‘fhaw the| DY the Japaness at ihe start of the row and fighting ‘went on at both g g e- s 5?‘ e e Priva Frank Laudermann, chest, se-|causeway, as their guns were too heavy places. 2 x en cennsylvania, March 3 to allow them to make the speed neces- There are in the jailed party twenty-three Japanese and seventeen Third Artillery, March D—Private George B. Gimms, % (AIbSc WY Harbrie| aaty 0 carry /e hrough the 1mass of| “ohiness S ohe it ot ol e e Tt ergeant Edwin W. Wall. B Fourth Cavalry, was | burning and falling buildings upon every | : e < J S s Comp. H—Private Rich- Company C— barracks on March | hand. So to the Iowans and Californians | ment. They will be taken care of at the hospital at the prison. All the ard King, scalp, L—Private P. Dyerman, shoulder, er in the hands of Pri-| alone was lefl the task of driving off the | Japanese are believed to have been principals in the fight of Sunday after- 1_::.m % I.-In,n\k‘hh f\;}—;ajm_ ‘=‘1gh|; Privatc _ Twenty-third Infantry morning. Investigation by the _~proa§1 of (hinvon}hl;;g :u‘:‘x:;_ "i[“]{e Towans, noon. Three men in the party are thought to have been the instigators and Fred A. John, hand, slignt Corporal John or board of officers has been mailed. . 4‘ consisting of Companies E. C, L, M, G,| generals of the massacre. = = K = % |1, B and K. under command of Majors No g ve yet been preferred agains Ros Ty : = = — ———————————— Hum<"ana Moore, respeciivaiv. and Bar | o, 50 SRS ERe e e B A e il be & ek et 1 of abou and that already people were afraid of | during the fighting have led the natives | {¢¥ies A and D of the California Artil- 3 ; o z s accusations will be preferred. In the meantime the men will be held under { the general term “for investigation.” some Malietoas, ing in the town. been strengthened pect the sincerity of the Teutons.” Among the pass s by < : - wamong the passengers by the Mariposa | through o _raging furnace that the ing theatrical managers in Australia. Mr. | {harged and right well did they do their MacManon comes tc country in con- | ) . | n_with stage business, but prefers| 'The elght companies of Iowans de- fiv 3 disclose_the details of his mission | Ployed s0 as to form a complete line easement may be raised about | clusions are correct _there While at Apia he took the | 2CT0SS the town, and then onward through | »ot without jeopardizing any of the | great advantage, both to the river and to Jortunity to visit the scene of war, and | the burning city they pressed, closely fol- | Jevees below. the farmers in raising the e es a vivid picture of the terrible con- | J0Wed by the artillerymen under Major | During the recent freshet the water | other foot. It is estimated that the work ion of this once flourishing little town, | Rice. Up one street they would go, only | stood at about twenty-four feet at Sacra- | can be done for less than 32000. A few has already destroyed and burned the | ter proclamation to the admiral had not hotel open,” he said, “was | to find it blocked with burning ruins, then | mento for nearly a week. He thinks it!days, at farthest, will determine what rec- rebel towns of Malie, Fasitotal and Vai- | increased the good feel between the | t ational, which & the ' head-|down another, where perhaps they might | could have been maintained at twenty- ommendations he will make. lutai, in Aaana, and Lufi Saluafata | admiral and the Co Never before by | rters of the American officers from | 8et through, though often compelled to | s " in Atua v fime she | @n offictal had iral been treated | the Philadelphin. ‘We were only allowed | retire to the coast and plunge into the bay | — ns to harbor she ils behind her a | in suc an u teous and insulting along the beach road by special | to their waist in order to pass burning | g FES i Yfrgi Dt hich | manner. In conclusion the admiral said | peruut, and then -in company- with & | obstructions the fleeing insurgents had | ADVERTISEMENTS. ety aen B¢ the Malieton | he did not intend to be bulldozed by any | S guard. All the stores were de- | erected to cover their hasty retreat. - | Mulingu. " Captain Sturdee, | German Consul, and he didn't intend to and Mataafa's men had fled to| For about five miles through fire and | e i lose any sleep over the matter. | behind the town. where they | water our forces pushed onward. wh ’ h ditable to his n ey | water o s pushed onward. when Q Al foamis ranen - en shelled by the warships only | they were halted and a camp prepared, | by Zh A rll M/ tnd Z h t‘ Z Il before. The white population | which camp is now our outpost and has | p S a e cht refuge at the mission, or | been thoroughly intrenched, and is now | et o e A R + ol i 9 struction | M'KINLEY’S MEANING i n s C ard the warships. There were 200 défended by the Third Battal f s s T : ended by d Battalion of the of the white T FULLY UNDERSTOOD | refusees on board the Royalist at one | Iowans, part of Batteries A and D of the e k time, but the overcrowding led to such | California and Battery A of the Nevada anitary condition of affairs Lhat| Artillery and Troop A of the Nevada 1€ n Falk been ordered to Manila to do auty on the 2 Just before we left the British cruiser W e me {um\ of the| Tauranga came steaming in through the °“-f-‘;|2§‘: ‘:-2??{0 loss of life on our side £ no S eeter Story to amanlty t an . to ulu.(rul«.nn‘ the el | ceetiat gmls ce mand}{rnugg\t up closs though one of the fowa boys was badly | P z wit andard and other | to the adelphia. Her officers tol ; ol & 2 AR tion S VAL plntion houte | Pt 1o he eec Uhak Bheicnt Sl | e (st She-had come 41 spei'an ‘(g | €08 by & bite o v Rand o Senieic | the anmouncement that the health-giver and aa at has s % | Kinley’s remarks e Tecent | W from Tougas under special orders. ‘ ¢ attel t went through his bedroom and has | Government as an gy. That state- | tion as the great ship made her way | v : ve h lh b d S Il ILS e a complete wreck of that portion of | ment the German Government takes ‘as | through the crowded harbor. z ?:“s,nbué ?(iesm‘ehr:l 25&?‘3‘"“5" i ttlml:l‘- €a t 7 "ngerf 004 s arsaparl a) te O, his dwelling. In addition to these the | being mischicvous, and it wishes it to | ‘Malietoa Tanu was crowned King the | falien belofe ne Ceacy —Sprnglelcs homes of Messrs. Parer (well Known in | be known at Washington that the words | day before we left, and now _that | While engage W s | BR Francitcny: Fach: Lober and Somidt | ueet by the Presiiehs. Were IMiiriveicd | (here ure o miny war vessels'In port 1t | soreading fhe free and mans heeed| he birth of an era of good health. It is léry, armed with Springfields and several small gatlings, gave chase. t the rebels around Apia. The admiral replied that governed in his actions by of his duty and not b his proclamation he he said and was not s and what he had proc do. The fact that wi "{6 be at hand in case of the ne- | spondence and protests to the admiral ‘of repelling an attack by night. | the German Consul d consider it cruises up and down the coast she | necessary to forward a copy of his coun- | His present idea is that the e houses now belng looted in the 3 Apia. Up to date the chief sufferers are | Mr. Skeen. the resident magistrate. and At : Special Cable to The C ang had to be landed. The | Cavalry ; Mr, Carruthers, one of the counsel for 1 2 d Cavalry, the Second Battalion of lowa Malietoa in the late trial. The houses of | aoa fe, Copvrishted, 1 h ghips Porpoise and Rovalist, the | peing ordered back to Cavite, which city | it ehe eortractor ton subplies to 0y ey : | Ljhited States crulser Philadelphia ~ and | tfey now hold, the First Battalion having | the British ships, and of Mr. Gurr, the | BERLIN, April 7.—The German Gov- | he German Falke wero in port. ther counsel for Malietoa, which are or ernment, through the me mile from the beach, have been | Herald, wis cked Reid" g0 far, with | ment of the A ¥ of flour ¢ cattle w re of b ’ was the e east of ongest | have been looted, and what could not be | here sol as sentiments of loyalty to expected there will be any more | £& : s taken away has been destroyed. the treaty of Berlin and absolutely noth. | (rouble with the natives. The Germans | While several bodles have since been di One of the shells from the Philadelphia, | ing else. are kept cl y on hoard their ships or | SOVeT e s e outp: e Bl et the one reliable specific for the cure of all S is_e e first o:po;mn;,\' i e Iovxua‘ - ’ Fom Bt S G i | blood troubles—which are the foundations if ever given a chance they will prove | rman consulate, where many refuge, so that they have no to make further trouble.’ owing. it s thought, to a defective fuse | HeESS in the a v v 1 ectly over ti e tak iown burat " couple of nundred vards | INCIDENT THAT ADDED opportunity from’ the ship and severely wounded a | loyal native in the thigh. One of the | TO AMERICAN PRESTIGE ENGLAND*AVWEXF llowing the first fight-| American officers was slightly wounded crowded with German | in the face. OWwing to these two unfor- | S eable that the Ger- tunate premature explosions the admiral | Touis Janin Jr.. a well-known California of the Ger- a%«in eécenldin dhfi o i helleq | experience at Samoa while returning on Captain Geary of the California Ar- » . - L i~ | “Fact Saturday when the flagship shelle e retur N | NUKUALOFA, Tonga, Dec. 13, 1s88.— | tillery has been appointed provost h H a’ d d h h ld Vaimoso she left the harbor and shelled | the Mariposa to San Francisco from the | Quite a ripple of excitement is prévafling | marshal of Cavite and has cleared the that Hood's is needed in every hnousenold. . from outside the reef a couple of miles tq | Antipodes. In common with his fellow- | in this Rip Van Winkle place, caused by | town of spies and suspicicus charac- a - PBoth sexes and all ages praise it Ward. On the same day the admiral | pass fmas s s required the Falke, which had persistent- | houg e s Mr. Janin was naturally anx- | the appearance of H. M. S. Tauronga | ters. T 9Kent her position o as to incommode | 10US t0 g0 ashore and view the ravages | carly last. Tuesday. The captain at once ! = fire of the British ships, to remové Cajlscd by the native war. | called gn his Majesty, George Tubou, and ther further lndwur?l u;]e shol_:-e or to take 1 was landed,” he said vesterday, “at | it soon leaked out that something very se- of a position outside all the other war ves- | the International Hotel at the M jous was i i : ghe Sels. The German now lies just inside the | of the town at the Mulinuu end | rious was in the wind. About dusk | harbor entrance. 2 fired orr a bod whom had h hours, tried to the America I found the place garrisoned | About three months ago Herr Gruno, Spring Medicine—"Hoods Sarsa-| Spring and Fall—"Spring and Fa | like a military post, as it was the head- be 3 : S : } the German Vice Consul at Samoa, ar- B[] parilla is invaluaSlehasla spring m:?icinex it| I take Hood's Sarsaparilla and it does me of Mata e ¥ quarters o e landing party from the |rived and made a demand on the T I]l S m: HE invi the whole system. take it | more 1 icine.” the e <§;‘m’i;m{2 KAUTZ BITTER TOWARD Philadelphia. At last we got a pass from | Government for claims Eanhaie ‘:“g““:f el (hrougyh M year'm a i G. Rhs:: Ml:lme m‘}' SEeEae g?\:vn"{l t British ships THE GERMAN CONSUL | Lieutenant Lansdale, the officer in charge, | £25,000 for debts contracted by Tongans eYery eprog i > d 3 ; d : . nes, Va. Shipesd fn 3 clis. which had | allowing me to walk along the beach road | with the German traders. Many of these St o blood purifier.” L. U. Gilman, Aurelia. a.| Springtime—*For years I have used ¥he mame howt an abacr Le foe Aout . | as far as the Supreme Court. Everywhere | 2CCOUDLS aTe of over twenty years' stand- PRinned from it e Weak and Sickly—"1 have been | Hood's Sarsaparilla in my family as a spring about 0 rebels on the tun coaar2¥ | APIA, Samoa, March 241 had an in- | We found signs of ruin and desertion. The | (5, 200 the Government repudiated the vk tid siekiy Al ooy B Bt o | onie e ir G Boe T o steengths They got within thirty yards of the ESiaE < . | stores were closed and no whites were | . " s of ihé| terview with Admiral Kautz yesterday. ites were | Mr. Gruno left for Samoa and rumor ; ; & trenches. Th behaved splendidly, | He spoke quite freely on the situation, |8DOUt. As to the natives, they had all | had it that unless tHe full amount were| Srant: ComPany A; Corporal A. G. Mor- Sarsaparilla has made me healthy and | ener.” W. M Potter, Bath, Me. and the Gatling (from the flagehis ) i < {d G . 4 i ? 5 Bo0a Work * The rarem the fagship) did | and considers he has been grossly in- |disappeared. The Mataafa rebels had paid Germany intended to selze Vou Vou,| ™Ti", yiiery—privates R. G. Benson, |Strong and I would not be without it"|' Dyspepsia—"1 used Hood's Sarsa- nards are sufering froo caced- All the | gulted by the German Consul General js- | fled into the bush behind the town, where | (1€ 2850 bafH o H. H. Cole, Battery H; J. J. Nidwell, K. Vernie F. Earnhart, Saw, N. C. | pari psia, indigesti 2 and exhaustion. At the ,‘M_su’lf‘fl;‘,gfifi‘f suing his counter proclamation. The | they Wwere being shelled by the men-of-| of apeotne hark[zgx? Elm"r';'mg‘.odgc' iy First Washington—Privates S. P. Drake, L “ln th ing 1 bli ':::;li: f-m‘ dyspev md:get'uen e e ish) Lieitenant Gaunt and the Consul are | admiral takes the stand that the Berlin | War. The loval followers of Malietoa | * Herf Gruno returned to Samoa and a| Company Ay Corporal M. J. Crais, L. anglbEsfa tie sping £ s chliged | =tiide a0ct t Wopked Hke o charim. ?31 _%d.hh) Major General Cunliffe of the | treaty, which he ls instructed by his Gov- | Tanu, the young King who was crowned | German warship was expected here later First Tennessee—Sergeant Major C. J. | to take some kind of medicine for languer | R P. Capen, Augusta, Me. ritish army. who acts as officer of the | ernment to uphold, doés not make any |Just before our arrival, were intrenched | 10 enforce the claim. —The Tauronga | smith. station. e Ry Horey . and lassitude, and I find Hood's Sarsapari i i W . o The PhiE e Seaman | provision whatever for a provisional gov- (on the Mulinuu peninsula. Armed sailors e T AR TOW quTS 0-| . Elghteenth Infantry —sergeant C. W. | B R F R L '; la':mua Indigestion—1 could act sit up or ¥ Royalist native hot in tpicnd one | ernment. His instructions are to carry | from the Philadeiphia patrolied tne roads | the captain and Governor were closeted | Latwich: Compdny M: Corporal W. W. ¢ a person feel steady. | eat, I was troubled so with indigestion. There is intense feeling here agsiuet the | OUt the treaty in accordance with the |and it was not safe to venture more than | for several hours, and the Touronga i Hines C; Private G Acaft O cheerful and happy.” Gustave J. Sunder- | Now, after taking Hood's Sarsaparilla, I work Germans, and they are accused of & ,‘v,n” views of a majority of the consular rep- |2 few vards inland. We tried to explore steamed here as fast as her engines could Tenth Pennsylvania—Corporal E. C. Long, mann, New Bremen, O, ‘»all s el s f " . and giving information (o the reb, PYIRE | resentatives. The admiral Is very angry | On€ of the side paths leading from the | Dropel her, To-day the captaln rémaiged | Company B, = e 5 4 ¢ | y and feel in perfect health” Miss n, ight is an T e s A Y P i ‘i 3 i T ; venty- nfantry—Sergéant Jos ] Clar: ghting ght Is an entirely de- | with the German Consul, and blames him | S2ACh {0 & native village. hut were speed. | i HN0 Ol o e B taa At 8] Heny Gomoany Cf Drivates L A, Verns welling in Hip-Tsuffered a year Selmas b ily confronted by a half-naked sav: . . i P = [ entirely for the present attitude of the | ny wern vnking rifie Ho iked Savage and | oiclock to-morrow. The Tauronga has on | sea m. Sumpach, M. with pains in my hip which swelled parture in Samoan warfare. is a A rebels, as the' natives were obeying his | business, so we retired. board £25000 to pay Germany, as Great U. S. 8. Petrel-Seaman Emil Bettgen. greatly. A friend advised Hood's Sarsa- system of dividir o small ba this points to German :w«miné.”'(xi‘ Sick Every Spring—*l was sick every spring for five years. I used five torious Bulow, who led the rebels nn | command to retire to their homes when | “At the Tivoli Hotel we came under | Britain assumes the claim just. C ; B p ? s on | o nder Twentieth Kansas—Corporal J. R. Ellfott, ; : 3 ; January 1, = ot in Apia, and it is not | the German proclamation was issued. |British care and had to get another pass. e aa T Company G. parilla. I took it and it has entirely cured | bottlés of Hood's Sarsaparilla and have not ook ‘& mative trovpe re Mmarquardt, who | At the meeting of the Consuls and sen- | EYerywhere there was the greatest ELLWE HE STAND. Fourth Cavalry—Privates Martin Matthias, | me." . Lillie . Brittenham, Hubbardstown, | seen a sick day since” G, W, Sloan, Mil- ~ P tinent a . o friendship and camaraderie between Eng- v c: = G: £ s & 3 vho Pttt v | ior naval officers the flagship th - B N 0p C; T. J. Flynn, G; Charles Fromberg, 5 O vinas ago. And who has, under the | yival expiatned his positidn: Under. ad- | lish ana Americans, but nowhere couid | Denies That He Attempted to Bribe| 1. pued Thomas, K. Sergean I Beach, Sy gy e p government, acted 'on the dual 2 » the | the Germans be seen. In fact, the G & Do Thopes Ko SerklahL M 1 Bdon, ] capacity of * and arimo2! | treaty there could be no provisional fim-l' 2 act, the Ger- Santa Cruz Supervisors. c. Health Run Down—"My wife was| Impure Blood—Abscess—“An | | mans were practically prisoners on board e s 7 t, and the agre v & i & “ y i i % . . polse; put Admiral Kautz has since i and trylng clrcumstances for the protec- | OIS BOK EetipeRNE . DIOUSITR DR EIENE i ;‘:l;;:{l’!:«;: ax‘?’:emé?(’:daa“(emm to| e ComPMnY Mrivates . W. Frederick, | Pottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla she was feeling | by impure blood. Hood's parllla has OWe im to6 go on t rec i € an erty was just as pro- : Vi S ndan -day = eAlle. s 1 perfect | g the Word of honor of the Germa.coeiv~ | vislonal as the government ftself. Pifc | “The charges for the Philadelphia's six- | testified that he never attempted t;t’bg;)e Swouikny BioHasy Mccahvil, D. better and is now ly well. Eats well | made me as sound as a dollar and the By b ahpnor of the German cap- | ViSR!, 35,05 508 Bupreme Caurt, ang |inch guns proved in many cases defective: | N Mogher- He a1 ha oot ceioHibe Fourth Infantry—Private H. J. Bates, |and sleeps soundly.” Charles N, Prediger. | cure is permagent” W. H. Heffner, Al part from the Falke. This leniency was | e hoped that a plah of action would | The powder was either weak in explosive | asked him about the rumored change in | - Company L. Blair, Neb. 3 5 : o Shown on account of the dangerous Hiiness be agreed upon for restoring peace to the eftect o‘{egig)hlmg flr“e.‘ to such an extent | Aptos bridge plans, Mosher "fi""e“ g Prisoners for Alcatraz—Privates Mar- i vira, Pa. of the prisoner’'s wife. island without the intervention of armed 2 aim o e gun. In|one had changed the plans. tin H. de Lancy, H, Third Artillery i ] i i A Ralf-caste, Tavior, was arrested on | [OT¢E. The British and American Con. | Some instances the shells burst prema- | of money was made. He emphaileois | H. A, Lyons, B, First Colorado: George | LDYSP@PSia—‘Dyspepsia troubledme| Languid and Dizzy—"Feeling lan- the first dav. and 1s St i irone o (43 | Suls and naval officers agree with the | turely, one striking the American con- | denied the statement made on the wit.| Patterson, L. Fourteenth Infantry; W, A, |50 I could not keep food on my stomach. | guid and dizzy, with no appetite or ambi- Porpoise as a spy. He had been i ¢! admiral. The German Consul said that | sulate’ and wounding a marine, As the | ness stand by Mosher. Th B : ; s il B b : Tumeation with the ebere 2k omdyCom- | having accepted the Provisional Eovern | result of this, Admiral Kautz decided to | the jury to-morrow. © case goes to | Blnck M ety Dasota. - Me- | Hospital treatment failed, but after taking | tion, I took Hood's Sarsaparilla with the best an American of shady reputation and g | Ment he cowd not recede from his posi- | go outside one day and thoroughly test Dishonorably discharged—Privates 1. ¢, | H0od's Sarsaparilla I am entirely weil” | results. For general debility I think it su- Mataafa sympathizer. Moors hims tion under any circumstances whatever | his ammunition, % 7 S confined to his own Store and ixm;;figve‘; Com T Rad Tusiradtione. trom Berlin. “This action led to a ludicrous blun- Yossmits Valley, Falls, B, First Montana; Cornelius Hoimes, | C. E. O'Kelly, Kenwood, Miss. perior to anything." H. Baum, Clinton, Mo. 10 see o Oné except In the Dresence ang | | LAter after the meeting, Rose nut his | der, though it told entirely in favor of Via Inspiration Point, now open for tour-| F, Eighteenth Infantry; J. P. Green, B, hearing of a sentry. This Moore has| Views in Writing to the admiral, and saia | the Americans. The German warship | {5tS. Roads in excellent condition. Now | First Montana. backed up the German tales fo Mataafa | German warships could act only if Ger- | Falke happened to be outside on the | i€ the time to see Yosemite. Stages run and is directly respongible for much of man property or life were to be pro- | same day, and when the Ameri daily. Sleeping car to Raymond com- IVER CHAN harm. 5 the | Focted against danger or in the case of | opened fire the natives naturally Con: | mencing April . Office S. P. Co., 613 Mkt.+ B EL PRESERVED. : During Friday night, March 17. there | the Supréme Court issulng a warrant for | cluded that war between the nations had e r—— WOODLAND. Aprl 7.—M was some excecdingly annoying shooting | arrest against [ndividuals. On no other | begun. As the Falke returned to port Threw a Stone at the Queen. - Anrdl 7.=M. A. Nurse, en- ’ g I , , a small party, possibly one or | ground could German warships intérfere | first, they also assumed that she CEW Y r gineer in the department of public works, two, and strongly suspected of being a | in Samoa, and according to instructions | been ignominiously driven back by ':?12 ’\Efl“ s\m}h' “,‘{"” T—A special cable | is enthuslastic over the manner in which couplé of Germans. Theéy fired at the | under which he acted there would be no | United States cruiser. The prestige of | 0 the Sun from Rome says: A drunken | the big easement at Elkhorn performed searchlight of the Porpoise. Fortunate. | military interference by Germany. He | our nation gained immensely by this | Man threw a stone this afternoon into | its work. He says that the demonst: Iy no harm was done, but the ship was| also protested against the issuing of the | little unrehearsed incident. ’I}l'u ‘Ameri- | the carriage in_which Queen Margherita | tion that it is one of the 14 Bib it struck several times. The firing seemed | proclamation by Admiral Kautz pending | can sailors are very popular with the | was riding. The missile —missed the bl T to come from the direction of a store | instructions from the treaty powers; also | loyal natives, and the presence of a pow- | Queen, who displayed no alarm over the plrl;'“mla B v aog o ceetying ifhe owned by a Frenchman (Lotofie), a strong | against _the return to Apia of the de- | erful cruiser like the Philadelphia has | affair. The man was arrested. No polit- | Grannel of the river and of averting the Never Disappoints Mataafa man. Next afternoon @ raid was | ported Malietoans, which was & menace | convinced them. that the Tni ical importance attaches to h Gt ron s ares Lacts of Tarming | . . o SO A RRsb Rty A siff ?';.a‘:'er"r’n‘w": i\rnrr: Ir\v; "ge British and sev- :\;’ m%rflfl-‘;f t%tatsat‘l?ofl'}‘a?g hei_‘ r;m?n::éé s :a nuwm;‘ to ge counted wltr;\,(ed("gr(gnl:: T C__ _._.,_____ls e ;‘::’:idc:?;vrnoc‘:gxwmers RRE e ULt H d (H"s ‘ e oun : e a e Falke had made | influence has been correspondingly = di- o Cure a Cold : p v irritati e " S daye, v en | it o et et T " | miiine fr (e o (h Sekmats | s smcntine e, e, T A1 | S ke CoAT st oy | 2000 5 e liver dls; the non-imitating_and x skirmish 3 y 3 roclams N afraid the | to carry out their promise of protection | d { Motootua, a half mile fro= @aval.4 admiral’s proclamation would do harm, | to Mataafa and the inaction of the Falke airc.u“fi\‘: g'z'n‘-‘."si.’.‘i:."z“l"?m’ ‘Q‘.‘:nhelll::hwu?x:; :xe:;'nlevvlgvs n:n;et‘el;;ufigj;g?v: bcc)(t’l‘:%?y only cathartic to take fl)tfll HOOJ’S Sar '[Ia 2